There is a kind of money lesson you cannot get from a book, and I want to give you mine at the start, because it is the only one I am going to tell you in this chamber. One story per book. That is the rule I set for myself, and the restraint is not modesty — it is the whole effect. A man who tells you five stories is entertaining you. A man who tells you one is asking you to carry it.
My grandmother had money in a bank. Then there was no bank. Not a bank in trouble, not a bank with a queue outside it, not a bank that paid out some fraction of what it owed. There was a building, and the building was still there, and the money that had been inside it had simply stopped existing, the way a word stops existing in a language nobody speaks.
She was not a foolish woman. She had done every single thing that a careful person is told to do. She had earned it honestly. She had not gambled with it. She had put it somewhere respectable, where the serious people put theirs, and she had not touched it, and it had sat there behaving itself for years. Every rule she had been given, she had followed. And then the country she had followed those rules inside of ceased to be the country she had followed those rules inside of, and all of it, every year of it, went to nothing in an afternoon.
What she got out with was in the hem of a coat.
I want you to sit with the arithmetic of that for a second, because I have sat with it my whole life. Decades of careful, respectable, correct behaviour: gone. A few ounces sewn into cloth by a woman who did not trust the correct behaviour quite as far as she was told to: kept. The ratio was not close. It was not even a contest. The keeping beat the earning by a margin that no return in any market has ever come near, and it beat it because the keeping was the only part that survived the thing nobody had planned for.
I did not learn from that what you might think I learned. I did not learn that banks are bad, or that gold is magic, or that the world is out to get you. Those are the lessons people take from that story when they want an excuse to do something stupid, and I have watched a number of men in my community take exactly those lessons and lose a second fortune proving them.
What I learned is narrower and much more useful, and it is the foundation of everything in this book:
Everything else in personal finance is downstream of that sentence. Every asset you will ever buy has to be bought with money you kept. Every year of compounding you will ever get has to run on money you kept. There is no chamber of this book that opens for a person who has not first done the keeping, which is why this is Book One and not Book Three, and why it is the book I am giving away.
Why the old man got there first
George Clason worked this out in 1926 and dressed it up in a costume. He wrote it as a parable set in ancient Babylon, in an English that was already archaic when he wrote it, full of thees and thys and men who speak in the cadence of a translated scroll. A great many people find that charming. A great many other people find it unreadable, put the book down on page nine, and go their whole lives without the one idea in it that would have changed their arithmetic.
So let me take the costume off, because underneath it is the single most important operational instruction in the history of money writing, and it does not need a robe.
Clason's central move was to notice that people treat their own future self as the last creditor in the queue. Everybody else gets paid first — the landlord, the supplier, the card, the phone, the car, the person who is owed and who will call if they are not paid. And your future self will not call. Your future self has no collections department. So your future self gets whatever survives to the end of the month, which in the overwhelming majority of cases is nothing, not because the money was insufficient but because the queue was ordered wrongly.
His fix was to move your future self to the front of the queue. Not to the front of your intentions — to the front of the actual, physical order of operations. Take the share out first, before any other creditor is paid, and then run the month on what is left. That is it. That is the entire idea, and it is roughly a hundred years old, and it is still, by a distance, the highest-yielding sentence in this genre.
The part he could not have said
Here is where I have to add something, and it is the reason this chamber needed rewriting rather than reprinting.
Clason's reader had a wage. So did Ramsey's reader, and Sethi's, and Hardy's. Every one of them writes for a person who can answer the question what do you make with a single number. My reader cannot. My reader runs a chair, a booth, a truck, a stall, a shop in a strip mall between a phone repair place and a laundromat, and her income is a different number every Tuesday, and in February it is a different number in a way that frightens her.
Tell that woman to save ten per cent of her income and you have told her nothing, because there is no such number. Ten per cent of which week? The good one in December, or the dead one in March? A rule she can only obey in her best week is not a rule. It is a mood, and it will be gone by spring.
So the rest of this chamber rebuilds Clason's idea for a person whose income is a distribution rather than a number. Same idea. Same order of operations. Different arithmetic underneath it — arithmetic that survives February.
My grandmother's coat had a hem before it had gold in it. The hem came first. That is the whole of Book One.